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SRP Diabetes Blue Sky Grants

This new initiative is for projects in diabetes and metabolism research for well-defined innovative pilot projects that aim to demonstrate proof of principle.

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Scientists looking up at the blue sky Photo: Adobe AI generated picture

The project should be of a "high risk 鈥 high reward" type that cannot yet attract funding from conventional funding agencies. The aim should be to obtain proof of principle and thereby provide the basis to obtain other funding. The project should not be a continuation or expansion of already funded projects. Preliminary data is not required in the proposal, but the underlying concept, premise or hypothesis must be plausible and testable, and the proposal must be focused with a well-defined goal that is achievable within the timeframe and amount of the award. Grants are for one year and amounts to 500 000 SEK + 25% INDI. The applications are evaluated by an external committee covering different expertise within the field of diabetes and metabolism.

See the call text 2024 below for further information. The call will likely be repeated in the fall 2025.

Awarded the first round of Blue Sky Grants 

Pawel Kozielewicz: Group leader at Dept of Physiology and Pharmacology, receives a grant for "Proof-of-concept studies to propose an orphan G protein-coupled receptor GPR61 as a novel target in metabolic disorders"

Ana Teixeira: Group leader at Dept of Physiology and Pharmacology receives a grant for 鈥淢apping Insulin Receptor Activation States at the cell membrane鈥

Malin Flodstr枚m Tullberg: Professor at Dept of Medicine Huddinge receives a grant for 鈥淢icrosampling and ultrasensitive detection of islet autoantibodies in skin interstitial fluid for screening and early detection of type 1 diabetes鈥

Jens Magnusson: Group leader at Dept of Laboratory Medicine receives a grant for 鈥淎utonomous gene circuits for precise differentiation of pancreatic 尾 cells鈥

Daniel Dautan: Postdoctoral fellow at Dept of Clinical Neuroscience receives a grant for 鈥淩elationship between Type 2 diabetes and Parkinson鈥檚 disease, a Vagal nerve investigation鈥

Thomas Contesse: Postdoctoral fellow at Dept of Neuroscience receives a grant for 鈥淯nravelling the function of lateral hypothalamic GLP1R neurons in obesity鈥

See call text for all information

External Evaluation Committee

Michael Czech, University of Massachussetts

Michele Solimena, Paul Langerhans Institute Dresden

Dominique Langin, I2MC INSERM Touluse

Maria Craig, UNSW Sydney

Stefan Nobel
2025-05-05